Michelle Obama: â€œWe Are In The Midst Of A Huge Recoveryâ€

Mac Slavo: Today we are fortunate enough to be provided with an economic analysis from an unlikely source. She may not be a trained economist or nutritionist, but given that she knowsÂ what our children should be eatingÂ for school lunches you better bet she knows what a healthy economy looks like too!

The First Lady joined WPGC â€˜sÂ Pablo and FreeÂ in Washington D.C. for a radio interview this week and discussed her view that the US economy is well into recovery territory and only getting stronger.

After inheriting one of the worst recessions in history, Mrs. Obama makes it a point to tout her husbandâ€™s hand in bringing America back from the brink.

Have you ever wondered how billionaires continue to get RICHER, while the rest of the world is struggling?

"I study billionaires for a living. To be more specific, I study how these investors generate such huge and consistent profits in the stock markets -- year-in and year-out."

Michelle Obama: â€œI mean, we are seeing right now that we are in the midst of a huge recovery. Right? Â Because of what this president has done.â€

Pablo and Free: â€œYes.â€

Michelle Obama:Â â€œPulled this economy from the brink of collapseÂ when we were losing 800,000 jobs a month. Now were gaining everyâ€¦ throughout most of his presidency, weâ€™ve been adding jobs to this economy because of what heâ€™s been doing. The stock market has doubled. Housing prices are rising. Foreclosure rates are lowering. But in the face of that,Â you still have people trying to convince us that things arenâ€™t better.â€

Pablo and Free: â€œUh huh.â€

Michelle Obama:: â€œAnd that just doesnâ€™t make sense. Now, Barack of all people knows that we still have a long way to go to completely rebuild the economy. ButÂ weâ€™re headed in the right direction. And when you see all of that truth, itâ€™s hard to understand why are people blocking this? Why are people talking about not raising taxes on wealthy people? Why is it that people donâ€™t want to fight to make sure that veterans have job opportunities?â€

Technically, weâ€™ve actually been losing jobs in this economy. Officially about 500,000 since the President took office. But if weâ€™re looking from inside the bubble at the Bureau of Labor and Statistics unemployment rate dropping under 8% we can see where Mrs. Obama has gotten confused. She probably doesnâ€™t realize that three Americans leave the labor force for each one that joins it, which skews the statistic by reducing the number of actual people officially available for work vs. the number currently working. In actuality, not enough jobs have been created to offset the millions that have been lost during the last four years and the unemployment rate, ifÂ calculated the way it was during the Great Depression, would beÂ around 23%.

House prices may be rising, but theyâ€™re not alone. Under the Presidentâ€™s direction the country has printed more money in the last four years than during any other period in history. This massive inflation of our monetary supply has led to price increases across the board â€“ for all consumer goods. We understand that itâ€™s easy to be unaware of grocery store consumer price increases when you never have to do your own shopping and have a seven figure yearly budget for your ownÂ personal culinary team.

The other side effect of this multi-trillion dollar monetary infusion is a rising stock market. Yes, itâ€™s doubled, and the top 10% of income earners in this country should be happy, becauseÂ they own some two-thirds of all stocksÂ in America. All the while, American workers struggle with salary cuts and minimum-wage jobs just to make ends meet. Very few average Americans have gained anything as a result of rising stock prices. As noted above, all weâ€™ve really gotten is price increases for key commodities like food, gas, water, and electricity.

And while Ms. Obama may cite stocks price increases and a lower official unemployment rate as signs of a huge recovery, what she may not have realized is that during this time period the stockÂ marketÂ wasnâ€™t the only metric that has doubled.